Let’s Talk Pest Resistance Tech, Say Scientists

Since 1990, the number of resistant-crop pests has doubled. Today, there are about 500 insects, 218 weeds, and 190 fungi pests that have shown resistance, putting some of the US’s major staple crops at risk.

A notable pest of recent concern is the corn rootworm. Proving many scientists’ fears and early detections to be true, the corn rootworm has now shown significant resistance to the GM Bt corn that makes up 75 percent of the US corn crop. Yikes.

This isn’t news to scientists. Bt Corn was originally introduced in the US in 1996, and farmers welcomed the seed with open arms as it avoided billions of dollars of crop losses. But showing signs of resistance since 2009, Bt corn is proving it’s not the end-all-be-all.

“Pests are remarkably adaptable,” said Tabashnik. “They usually evolve resistance to any tactic that’s used repeatedly to control them, so this problem is not limited to transgenic crops.”

Tabashnik has said that this year marks the 100th anniversary of the first reported case of insecticide resistance, and that rather than seeing resistance as a black-and-white issue, industry leaders must start seeing the gray.

“Finding ways to delay resistance,” he said, “is a never-ending challenge with any pest management approach.”